Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s stay-at-home order could extend into June, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Tuesday on a conference call with reporters.

Lightfoot was asked during the call whether a June 30 deadline for an ordinance giving her extended powers signals anything about when the city expects stay-at-home orders and restrictions to be lifted. She said no.

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“I wouldn’t attach much meaning for that. That would be kind of an outside date, but I certainly hope we’ll have a better view of what the future looks like before then. I’ve made no secret of the fact that, April 30 is no longer, I think, a viable date,” Lightfoot said. “I would expect an extension of the stay-at-home order and the other orders that were put in place as a result of the response to COVID-19 to go through sometime in May. It certainly could go into June. June 30 is just kind of an outside marker.”

But, she said, the state’s current April 30 end to the stay-at-home order is not viable anymore. Lightfoot reiterated her previous prediction that the order could go into May, then added that it could go into June.

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Lightfoot said the city will be guided by data and science as well as the Chicago Department of Public Health “to let us know when we have a comfort level of coming out of this period of the COVID process.”

“But we’ve been very clear that we have to see a lot of things in place before we’re going to have a comfort level that we can come back into congregate settings. Obviously, the cases not only have to slow, as they have, they have to decrease dramatically, and we haven’t seen that yet and we’re not near there,” Lightfoot said.

“We haven’t seen a substantial drop in the number of overall ICU cases, and particularly the percentage of ICU beds occupied by COVID, positive or people under investigation for COVID. We want to see much more widespread testing than what’s available right now, and we need to build an infrastructure so we can do extensive contact tracing. Those are the bare minimum, and we’re not there yet on any of those metrics.”

Though the stay-at-home order and other restrictions have made a big difference, she said, “we’re still not even close to being out of the woods.”